My understanding is that Pakistan used China’s defence industry to build Pakistan-first Aircraft. China never showed intentions to induct JF-17 and their Air Force refused any chance of inducting JF-17 in the Chinese flag 20 years ago. I mean Pakistan built JF-17 with Chinese help similar to how iPhone is produced in China.
our relationship with China in the late 90s and early 2000s was unbelievably close so the terms and conditions are almost non-existent. Pakistan can technically take this project to any direction and try to indigenise or involve another partner without any consent of the Chinese government/air force.
We are partners indeed and China makes profit from the export version of JF-17 but it is primarily a for-Pakistan Aircraft with the help of Chinese defence industries.
I don't know whether your view is personal or general in Pakistan. But this view is far from the truth.
Let us first review the history of JF-17.
Phase 1
1986. Pakistan puts forward the SABRE II program and invites bids. In the end, only GRUMMAN was deeply involved in the program and presented the actual proposal.
1988. Pakistan and GRUMMAN failed to agree on a design, and for other reasons, Pakistan terminated the SABRE II program, and GRUMMAN used its existing R&D results to market to China. The United States and China launched the SUPER 7 program.
1989. Due to the “Tiananmen Incident”, the US terminated all US-China cooperation programs, and the SUPER 7 program was terminated.
Phase 2
1991. Dissolution of the Soviet Union. China cooperates with Mikoyan, and CAC seeks to restart the SUPER 7 program on its own.
1992. China seeks cooperation from Pakistan. But Pakistan's actual willingness is not high. Both sides signed a memorandum of cooperation, but no formal contract was signed.
1993. China and Russia signed a cooperation agreement on RD-93 engines. After that, China officially restarts the SUPER 7 program.
1995. China and Pakistan signed a memorandum of understanding for cooperation in the development of new fighter jets, but still no formal contract was signed. The two sides disagreed on some technical details and could not reach an agreement. (At this time, Pakistan did not trust China's technical capabilities and wanted to use a lot of Western equipment and weapons)
Phase 3
1998. India and Pakistan conduct nuclear tests successively. Both sides are subject to international sanctions. Pakistan's access to Western equipment and weapons is cut off.
1999. Kargil War breaks out between India and Pakistan, and a month after the war begins, Pakistan quickly reaches an agreement with China. Formal contracts were signed. The fighter jet was named FC-1. The ratio between China and Pakistan is 50:50.
2003. 01 prototype fighters left the factory on May 21st and completed its maiden flight on August 25th.
2004. FC-1 was officially named. Chinese name “
FC-1 枭龙”, Pakistani name “
JF-17 Thunder”.
2006. The heavily modified prototype 04 completed its maiden flight.
2007. The first JF-17s were delivered to PAF.
In 2008, PAC officially began assembly of the JF-17, marking the end of the initial development of the JF-17.
What happens after that is simple and public. I will not rehash it.
Combining this information feeds into a couple of questions.
1, The JF-17 program, a collaborative effort between China and Pakistan, is not at all the same concept as the Chinese production of the iPhone.
APPLE has full ownership of the iPhone, it is completely independent and autonomous in finding any suitable partner to manufacture it, and it can also be completely independent and autonomous in building its own factory completely anywhere.
The JF-17 program is jointly owned by China and Pakistan, it does not fully belong to Pakistan. Neither party has the right to do anything over the objection of the other. Based on the reality, China has no objection to Pakistan looking for other alternative subsystems and even supports Pakistan's efforts to localize the production of the JF-17. But this does not mean that China is giving up the other half of the ownership of the JF-17 program.
2, In China's original plan, PLAAF will buy this fighter. However, because Pakistan's technical requirements for this fighter are completely different from PLAAF's, and because Pakistan's constant hesitation has led to a very slow progress of the project's preliminary work, PLAAF finally decided to give up on purchasing this fighter. ------ The J-10 had completed its maiden flight in 1998, a year before Pakistan officially signed the contract.